can you play a round of golf with one club? " you can but you'll suck"
Im likin this statement
can you play a round of golf with one club? " you can but you'll suck"
can you play a round of golf with one club? " you can but you'll suck"
It would seem that with modern firearms and bullets a good argument can be made for owning a single gun in a single caliber for hunting in NA. Not much fun, but it has been argued...
How about the bullet then? No matter the gun, I submit there must be one bullet that can be used on all game in appropriate caliber/weight. To this end, I have purchased a box of Barnes TSX for all the calibers I own and I really don't think there is any need to own any other bullet, especially after reviewing the independent test results on this bullet's terminal ballistics. With a near perfect mushroom, excellent penetration and 100% weight retention, how could one ask for more? Add to this the fact that they are a lead-free bullet and I see no down side, other than the price.
If I ever get too old and crippled up to hunt,I may take up golf.
With a 130 or 140gr TSX depending on where you hunt.It's got to be the .270 Winchester.
= 180 gr Nosler Partition, 30.06
find that walking the course and carrying my golf bag full of clubs, water, extra balls etc gets me ready for hunting season. My golf bag is roughly the weight of my rifle and day pack. Golf season ends just as hunting season begins. Golf is all about hand eye coordination and judging yardage while gauging the wind. Kinda like shooting and hunting. I don't get why so many shooters put golfing down.
I guess if you're a road hunter you could always use a power cart to get ready for your hunting season!
With a 130 or 140gr TSX depending on where you hunt.
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I'd suspect that 10 grains doesn't care where you hunt.
Some might feel better with the heavier bullet for heavier game.I'd suspect that 10 grains doesn't care where you hunt.
Some might feel better with the heavier bullet for heavier game.
The whole idea is staying in good enough shape that I don't have to get in shape for hunting season.I work out,mountain bike,and walk instead of driving at work.I have been on several backpack hunts for sheep and goats where I carried my rifle as well as a 60lb pack for 7-10 days in the mountains,so I am well away of what a physically demanding hunt is.To keep my hand eye co-ordination,I shoot skeet, and ground squirrels in the summer,and coyotes in winter.
So whether we are talking conditioning,or hand/eye co-ordination,golfing is hardly going to be an improvement over my present hobbies.
I'm guessing you are 35 years old or younger.
When I was younger I had to choose between trap or golf.



























